The most fundamental example of mirror symmetry compares the Fermat hypersurfaces in
$\mathbb {P}^n$
and
$\mathbb {P}^n/G$
, where G is a finite group that acts on
$\mathbb {P}^n$
and preserves the Fermat hypersurface. We generalize this to hypersurfaces in Grassmannians, where the picture is richer and more complex. There is a finite group G that acts on the Grassmannian
$\operatorname {{\mathrm {Gr}}}(n,r)$
and preserves an appropriate CalabiāYau hypersurface. We establish how mirror symmetry, toric degenerations, blow-ups and variation of GIT relate the CalabiāYau hypersurfaces inside
$\operatorname {{\mathrm {Gr}}}(n,r)$
and
$\operatorname {{\mathrm {Gr}}}(n,r)/G$
. This allows us to describe a compactification of the EguchiāHoriāXiong mirror to the Grassmannian, inside a blow-up of the quotient of the Grassmannian by G.